How to Build a Winning Pre-Med or BS/MD Admissions Profiler

Hosted by Former Brown Interviewer, Peter Evancho

How to Build a Winning Pre-Med or BS/MD Admissions Profile

Hosted by Former Brown Interviewer, Peter Evancho

Webinar overview

Join Prepory Coach and medical admissions expert Peter Evancho, for a free webinar on building a winning pre-med or BS/MD admissions profile. He’ll cover:

  • What top colleges and BS/MD programs are really looking for in aspiring pre-med students
  • The activities, leadership roles, research experiences, and community impact projects that strengthen an applicant’s profile
  • How to strategically plan coursework, testing, and summer activities to stand out
  • Common mistakes students make and how to avoid them early
  • Key traits and skills to develop over time for the strongest applications
  • A live Q&A to answer your college admissions questions
Pre-med and BS/MD webinar host Peter surrounded by a DNA emoji, hospital emoji, germ emoji, and a white coat emoji

Meet your webinar host: Peter Evancho

Peter has over 8 years of admissions experience, is a former admissions interviewer from Brown University, and has guided students to earn admission to Johns Hopkins, UMichigan, Brown University, UVA, NYU, and more.

Meet your webinar host:

Peter has over 8 years of admissions experience, is a former admissions interviewer from Brown University, and has guided students to earn admission to Johns Hopkins, UMichigan, Brown University, UVA, NYU, and more.

Pre-med and BS/MD webinar host Peter surrounded by a DNA emoji, hospital emoji, germ emoji, and a white coat emoji

Frequently asked questions for pre-med and BS/MD applicants

BS/MD programs look for students who have already demonstrated a serious, informed commitment to medicine through clinical exposure, research, and academic excellence, not just strong grades and test scores. These combined programs, which allow students to earn guaranteed or conditional medical school admission alongside their bachelor's degree, are among the most selective in the country. Evaluators want to see that a student understands what a career in medicine actually involves and has taken deliberate steps to explore it. Schools like Brown (PLME), Northwestern (HPME), and Case Western each weigh these factors differently, which is why tailored preparation matters.

The most competitive pre-med applicants build profiles around depth and coherence rather than a long list of unrelated activities. Clinical shadowing and healthcare volunteering demonstrate firsthand exposure to medicine, while independent or lab-based research signals intellectual initiative. Leadership in science or health-related organizations and community health work can strengthen a profile, but only when they connect to a clear narrative about why the student is drawn to medicine. Admissions committees want evidence that a student has genuinely tested their interest in the field, not simply collected credentials.

The most common mistake pre-med and BS/MD applicants make is treating the personal statement like a resume summary instead of a narrative that explains their relationship with medicine. Admissions committees at top programs are not looking for a list of accomplishments; they are looking for self-awareness, genuine motivation, and evidence that the student understands what a medical career actually involves. Other frequent missteps include applying to BS/MD programs without researching each program's specific culture and values, underestimating the weight of secondary essays, and spreading activities too thin rather than building depth in a few meaningful areas.

Yes, this webinar is relevant for any student on a pre-med path, whether or not they plan to apply to a combined BS/MD program. The core guidance on building a competitive profile, choosing the right undergraduate programs, developing a strong personal narrative, and identifying meaningful clinical and research experiences applies across both tracks. Students still weighing their options will leave with a clearer framework for making that decision, and those already committed to pre-med will gain practical guidance on positioning themselves for the most competitive outcomes.

Complete webinar transcript

Welcome and introductions

KATIE WILLINGHAM: Awesome. Alright, everybody. We will dive in here. We’ll leave the poll up for just a few more minutes for those of you just joining us, but we’ll jump in and get started.

Diving in with our topic for tonight: what it takes to get into Ivy League and top 20 schools. So we’ll be talking about a lot of the schools that you all mentioned to us. I want to give you a little bit of intro about me, and then of course doctor Glen, who’s here with us tonight and is going to be walking us through his presentation throughout. I’ll be diving in and answering your questions. I am a senior enrollment manager here at Prepory. What I do is take those early calls with you — students, parents, families, all together. I love when everybody’s together on a consultation. When you book an initial consultation with Prepory, that is with me and my team. I love having these early conversations, just learning a little bit more about your profile. And the goal of those consultations is really to deeply understand your goals and then help talk you through how exactly Prepory supports you in this pathway — in this case, towards Ivy League and the T20 schools, but of course with BS/MD all the way to STEM pathways, or pre-law, all of the different things that you might be interested in for college. Glen, why don’t you introduce yourself here as well?

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GLEN WATER: Hey, Katie. And I think those conversations that you have with Katie are some of the most important — it’s where we start. It’s that entry point that can inform a lot of the sort of work that we will do. And this is work that I deeply care about. I’ve been doing it for over 15 years, really on both sides of the desk. I started work at the Notre Dame Law School admissions office, worked as a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, but I’ve also been doing this as a teacher and counselor for many, many years.

One thing I do want to emphasize: it is doctor Glen Water. I’m not a medical doctor — this is important. If you have medical issues, I can’t help you with that. I got my PhD in education policy from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, which I’m naming for two particular reasons. The first is that it is the number one ranked school in education. And I say that not to be like ‘gotcha Harvard’ — which we did — but because I think it’s illustrative of this idea of rankings and what really informs them. It’s more than just the names. A lot of you put in all these most selective names, and a lot of those are in that T20. Once we get into both what those look like at a major level — Penn State, for instance, tends to actually punch above its weight on a lot of things, and that’s important to name — but all these other factors will influence what a school is and why it gets the rankings that it does, because that will ultimately inform how you get into those schools. If you know what they’re cueing in on, you will be able to align your profile to match that.

And the other piece is that part of the work that I did for my PhD was looking at the goals, culture, and missions of these institutions. So that research I did will inform what we’re talking about here, but I promise I won’t get too nerdy. It won’t get too theoretical. But before I get into all of that and the dive into the rankings, you’re probably wondering a little bit more about — okay, I know who you are, Katie, I know who you are, Glen, but what’s this Prepory organization?